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Thursday, August 9, 2012

Guy Who Predicted Japan Quake Predicting Australia Tsunami: WE WILL SEE

You
might remember the man who apparently predicted the Japanese earthquake
and tsunami: Mitchell Combes? Story is that he posted a 104 hour
countdown to the earthquake on his Facebook page and got it 100%
correct.

Nonetheless he has just posted his first real prediction
since the Japanese earthquake and tsunami, and if he is correct, we are
in for a massive global incident very shortly.

Here is what he posted about 45 minutes ago on his Facebook page (see image above):

"Ok
everyone, you've been warned of what's to come, we are getting
extremely close to the 104 hour tsunami warning. I strongly advise that
if you live on the east coast of NSW and west coast of USA, have your
evacuation gear ready to go as soon as possible. I said on March 11 that
California would be next after Japan's countdown... Sydney's earthquake
will be magnitude 9.5, California's earthquake will be magnitude 9.6,
followed by two 9.4's, all of these tsunamis will be created in the same
exact hour."

Will he be correct?

When asked how far
inland these tsunamis would reach and when exactly he will give his 104
hour countdown he replied, "70 miles inland. Days..."

He is
describing an unprecedented event that would pretty much change the face
of the planet - if correct, nothing to be taken lightly.

Coombes
states he hacks into HAARP and once the HAARP personnel fire up the
array, they cannot simply shut it down. In other words, once the process
has begun, the exercise is a done deal. From the moment the array is
fired up, says Coombes, there are approximately 104 hours before the
destruction occurs and the process cannot be aborted.

Coombes maintains that he will ONLY give the 104-hour alert once the array start-up process has already begun.

Thus, once the countdown announcement has been given, he cannot recant without being exposed as a fraud.

Nuclear Plants in California

As
of mid-2012, California had one operating nuclear power plant: Diablo
Canyon (2,160 megawatts), near San Luis Obispo. The San Onofre plant,
about midway between Los Angeles and San Diego, went offline in January
2012 and was ordered by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to stay
offline while tubing wear issues were investigated. Nuclear units at
both plants use ocean water for cooling.

Pacific Gas and Electric
Company (PG&E) owns the Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, which
consists of two units. Unit 1 is a 1,073 megawatt (MW) PWR which began
commercial operation in May 1985, while Unit 2 is a 1,087 MW PWR which
began commercial operation in March 1986. Diablo Canyon's operation
license expires in 2024 and PG&E must apply to the US Nuclear
Regulatory Commission for a 20 year license extension.
Southern
California Edison Co. and San Diego Gas & Electric own the two
operating units at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. Unit 2 is a
1,070 MW PWR that began commercial operation in August 1983, while Unit
3 is a 1,080 MW PWR that began commercial operation in April 1984. San
Onofre's operation license expires in 2022 and Southern California
Edison must apply to the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission for a 20 year
license extension.

California also has four commercial nuclear
power plants and an experimental plant that are no longer in operation.
These include:

* The Santa Susana Sodium Reactor Experimental
(SRE) was a small sodium-cooled experimental reactor built by Southern
California Edison and Atomics International at the Santa Susana Field
Laboratory, near Moorpark in Ventura County. It came on line in April
1957, began feeding electricity to the grid on July 12, 1957, and closed
February 1964. This reactor used sodium rather than water as a coolant
and produced a maximum of about 7.5 to 20 megawatts (electric). It was
considered as the country's first civilian nuclear plant and the first
"commmercial" nuclear power plant to provide electricity to the public
by powering the near-by city of Moorpark in 1957. On July 26, 1959, the
SRE suffered a partial core meltdown. Ten of 43 fuel assemblies were
damaged due to lack of heat transfer and radioactive contamination was
released. The plant has subsequently been dismantled. For more, please
visit the U.S. Dept. of Energy's website at: www.etec.energy.gov/History/Major-Operations/SRE.html.* The Vallecitos Nuclear Power Plant
near Pleasanton, Calif., was jointly built by PG&E and General
Electric Company and operated from 1957 to 1967. This was a small, 30
megawatt power plant. On October 19, 1957, Vallecitos connected to the
electrical grid and became the first privately funded plant to supply
power in megawatt amounts to the electric utility grid. The plant was
shut down in December 1967. The plant is in SAFSTOR and there are no
plans for any significant dismantlement in the foreseeable future. All
nuclear fuel has been removed from the site.

* The 63 MW Boiling Water Reactor at the Humboldt Bay Nuclear Power Plant
in Eureka was in operation by PG&E from August 1963 to July 1976.
It was the seventh licensed nuclear plant in the United States. It was
closed because the economics of a required seismic retrofit could not be
justified following a moderate earthquake from a previously unknown
fault just off the coast. It was permanently shut down July 2, 1976, and
retired in 1985. The plant was then placed in SAFSTOR (with spent
nuclear fuel rods stored in water pools on site) until anticipated full
decommissioning in 2015. See more on SAFSTOR below.

* The 913 MW Pressurized Water Reactor at the Rancho Seco Nuclear Power Plant,
located about 25 miles south of Sacramento, is owned by the Sacramento
Municipal Utility District in and was operation from April 1975 to June
7, 1989. It was closed by public referendum.* The 436 MW San Onofre Unit 1 Pressurized Water Reactor
was in operation from January 1968 to November 30, 1992. It was closed
by its owners rather than incur $125 million in required modifications.

The
Vallecitos, Santa Susana, and San Onofre Unit 1 have been
decommissioned (which involves have a plan for dismantling the reactor
and transporting all radioactive materials to a site for disposal.) The
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) staff in 1996 approved the
decommissioning plan for the Rancho Seco Nuclear Power Plant.

The
dismantling process will occur in stages, with "final teardown"
scheduled to begin in 2008. The nuclear spent fuel produced during 14
years of operation at Rancho Seco was kept cool in a water pool on site
and is now in protective dry storage.

The Vallecitos facility, a
General Electric nuclear plant, was the first reactor in the country to
be decommissioned. The plant is in SAFSTOR and there are no plans for
any significant dismantlement in the foreseeable future.

Under
SAFSTOR, often considered "delayed DECON," a nuclear facility is
maintained and monitored in a condition that allows the radioactivity to
decay; afterwards, it is dismantled. Under DECON (immediate
dismantlement), soon after the nuclear facility closes, equipment,
structures, and portions of the facility containing radioactive
contaminants are removed or decontaminated to a level that permits
release of the property and termination of the NRC license.

Spent
fuel can either be reprocessed to recover usable uranium and plutonium,
or it can be managed as a waste for long-term ultimate disposal. Since
fuel re-processing is not commercially available in the United States
and has not been shown to be commercially viable n this country, spent
fuel is typically being held in temporary storage at reactor sites until
a permanent long-term waste disposal option becomes available.http://www.energy.ca.gov/nuclear/california.html